LeOsler font

LeOsler is a modern display font family that is the first entry on our site for the Argentine designer Julia Martinez Diana and her Antipixel type foundry. A graduate from University of Buenos Aires, Julia is a specialist in the fields of type, web and brand design. As for the type design itself, we can easily say that she is fond of creating decorative handwritten typefaces full of life, energy and agility. This is exactly the case with LeOsler font family too.

When speaking about this typeface there is one word that immediately springs to mind and that is fun. LeOsler is fun to read or simply to look at and we bet that it is pure fun to work with too. This delightful typeface looks like it has just appeared in a child’s notebook or painting. It is artistic, clean and elegant and above all, stylish, and as such could be used in many projects like advertising, packaging and especially for toys, posters, fashion related items, illustrations, T-shirt logos, etc.

To maximize the user’s options LeOsler comes in several versions – Rough Light, Rough Regular, Rough Border Regular, Sharp Regular, Stamp Regular. Also, very interesting Icon sets in Light and Regular styles are provided to make the work even funnier. Other remarkable characteristic of LeOsler is the fact that obviously with it Julia Martinez Diana exploited the OpenType opportunities to full extent with features like ligatures, scientific superior and inferior figures, fractions, ampersand alternates, contextual alternates and more. What is more, there is a brilliant language support for languages based on Latin, Cyrillic and Greek alphabets.

Attractive type system comes in 104 styles and 4 widths with extended coverage of the Latin-, Greek- and Cyrillic Script. The design origins of Attractive are in early-20th centuries technical style aesthetics, but they are combined … Read More

DIN Neue Roman typeface adds something new to the technical origin of the typeface DIN 1451. The sanserif classic gets a serif counterpart that breaks with convention while preserving its readability. The industrial impression of … Read More